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Source Description
The phoenix’s commanding presence on this vase was created by adding clay to the surface of the white clay body and then intricately molding and carving it. Then cobalt blue was used to paint the paulownia tree upon which the phoenix perches. Yohei III used a masking technique, covering the phoenix with paper before adding pink color to the area surrounding it. Firing with an allover transparent glaze created a glossy surface, with the phoenix standing out boldly from the background. The mythical bird’s long tail sweeps majestically around the vessel so that one must move around it to see the eyespots in its plumes. A symbol of imperial power in both China and Japan, the phoenix is said to alight only in the paulownia tree. Upon close inspection of its face, one can see that the phoenix’s eye is in yellow under the glaze. The scene is set off at the bottom with a double band of underglaze blue above an incised ring of cloud.<br> <br>Once Yohei III had created his creamy translucent <em>taihakuji</em> glaze, he began applying it over the entire surface of an ivory clay body with motifs in low relief to achieve a creamy white-on-white design. He then began using the combination of gradated pink around raised motifs on a typical white porcelain clay body like the one for this vase. He masked his low-relief designs with paper before sprinkling diluted iron oxide glaze onto the surrounding areas through a net with a brush. These unpigmented elements stand out as starkly white against the gentle pink blush color that surrounds them. Still later, he added pink to the translucent creamy glaze he used in <em>kanpakuji</em> works and used it over motifs in relief on an ivory clay body for an overall pink-tinged cream effect (see <a href="http://www.clevelandart.org/art/2022.198">CMA 2022.198</a>).
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
299431
label
Flower Vase with Phoenix in Paulownia
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
299431
contentType
object
title
Flower Vase with Phoenix in Paulownia
description
The phoenix’s commanding presence on this vase was created by adding clay to the surface of the white clay body and then intricately molding and carving it. Then cobalt blue was used to paint the paulownia tree upon which the phoenix perches. Yohei III used a masking technique, covering the phoenix with paper before adding pink color to the area surrounding it. Firing with an allover transparent glaze created a glossy surface, with the phoenix standing out boldly from the background. The mythical bird’s long tail sweeps majestically around the vessel so that one must move around it to see the eyespots in its plumes. A symbol of imperial power in both China and Japan, the phoenix is said to alight only in the paulownia tree. Upon close inspection of its face, one can see that the phoenix’s eye is in yellow under the glaze. The scene is set off at the bottom with a double band of underglaze blue above an incised ring of cloud.<br> <br>Once Yohei III had created his creamy translucent <em>taihakuji</em> glaze, he began applying it over the entire surface of an ivory clay body with motifs in low relief to achieve a creamy white-on-white design. He then began using the combination of gradated pink around raised motifs on a typical white porcelain clay body like the one for this vase. He masked his low-relief designs with paper before sprinkling diluted iron oxide glaze onto the surrounding areas through a net with a brush. These unpigmented elements stand out as starkly white against the gentle pink blush color that surrounds them. Still later, he added pink to the translucent creamy glaze he used in <em>kanpakuji</em> works and used it over motifs in relief on an ivory clay body for an overall pink-tinged cream effect (see <a href="http://www.clevelandart.org/art/2022.198">CMA 2022.198</a>).
date
1897–1914
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q117716947
creators
299428
genreSpecific
Ceramic
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall: 20.6 cm (8 1/8 in.); Diameter: 15.9 cm (6 1/4 in.)
cul
Japan, Meiji period (1868–1912)
accession
2022.199
Source extras
tec
Porcelain with molded and carved design and underglaze color
tombstone
Flower Vase with Phoenix in Paulownia, 1897–1914. Seifū Yohei III (Japanese, 1851–1914). Porcelain with molded and carved design and underglaze color; overall: 20.6 cm (8 1/8 in.); diameter: 15.9 cm (6 1/4 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of James and Christine Heusinger, 2022.199
collection
Japanese Art
inscriptions
inscription
清風
inscription_translation
“Seifū” inscribed on the base
sortorder
1
inscription
清風
inscription_translation
Round seal on the top of the box lid: “Seifū"
inscription_remark
Storage box is inscribed and impressed with seals.
sortorder
2
inscription
清風
inscription_translation
Gourd-shaped seal on the bottom of the box lid: “Seifū"
sortorder
3
didYouKnow
In 1893, Seifū Yohei III became the first ceramist to be appointed as an Imperial Household Artist under a system introduced by the Japanese government in 1890.
citations
citation
Maezaki, Shinya and Sinéad Vilbar. <em>Colors of Kyoto: The Seifū Yohei Ceramic Studio</em>. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 2023.
page_number
Mentioned and Reproduced: cat. no. 55, pp. 137–139
citation
Goodall, Hollis. "Seifū Yohei III: Master of Finesse." <em>Impressions: The Journal of the Japanese Art Society of America</em> 45, part 2 (2024): 178-193.
page_number
Mentioned: p. 186; Reproduced: p. 190 (fig. 8)
creditline
Gift of James and Christine Heusinger
updatedAt
2026-05-29 08:53:16.975000
sourceId
299431
dept
Japanese Art
coll
Japanese Art
med
Porcelain with molded and carved design and underglaze color
creatorTags
male
Asian (from 1900 to present)
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
bedfd5ebf04dac3b